Nakamarra's Abstraction: Continuity and Change
I remember visiting Papunya Tula Artists' Todd
Street shop late in 1998, a few months after Mick Namarari Tjapaltjarri passed
away. Namarari was among the first of PTA's artists whose work I came to
recognize and love: the bold swirls of Bandicoot Dreamings, the subtle
variations of the dotted fields of Kangaroo or Marsupial Mouse Dreamings, the
broad, bold stripes of Rain Dreamings. I was hoping that I might find something
to add to our collection at this last moment, though I knew the odds were
long.Daphne Williams was hesitant when
I asked. Yes, she said, I have a couple of small canvases, but I can only show
them to you very quickly, in the back room. She explained that Mick's widow was
still in town, and Daphne feared upsetting her should she wander into the shop
and see the paintings again. When we
returned to PTA in 2001, Daphne remembered the incident, and our interest. This
time, she suggested, we might want to look at some new canvases that Mick's
widow, Elizabeth Marks Nakamarra, had painted; she also had a small Mouse
Dreaming their daughter Angelina had recently completed. I remember that last
work as being a gem-like haze of pointillist dots and to this day I regret
passing over it, as Angelina's artistic career proved short-lived, and we never
saw another of her works.But that day
sparked an enduring interest on my part in Nakamarra's work, in no small part
because the paintings that we saw that day, while quite different from those of
her late husband, showed her, like Mick, to be an artist willing to experiment
with a variety of styles. Like many of the widows or daughters of the great
old painting men of Papunya Tula, Nakamarra did not take up painting her
husband's Dreamings. Instead, she began producing works that were focused on
her own country, in her case Kalipinpa, just north of Sandy Blight Junction and
Kintore.Kalipinpa
is the site of a major Rain Dreaming, most famously depicted in the masterpieces
of Johnny Warangkula Tjupurrula. In the Tingari story, groups of ancestral men
and women gathered at the rockhole at Kalipinpa, where they danced and sang the
stories associated with the area before continuing on to the west and the
country around the great salt lake at Wilkinkarra, or Lake
Mackay.One of the paintings that
Daphne showed us that day was done in the classic style in which the Kintore
women worked at that time, with a heavy impasto of white acrylic on a black
field marking out a bush tucker story: the women collecting kampurarrpa,
or bush raisins near the main rockhole of Kalipinpa. It was in some ways an
unusually naturalistic work, with a clearly recognizable branch of honey
grevillea in the upper-right corner and large black bush raisins set around the
central waterhole and its surrounding sandhills. It was a lovely example of the
style of work being painted in the early years of the women's painting movement
out of Kintore but, I thought, nothing more. (My thanks to Papunya Tula Artists
for permission to reproduce the images included
here.)Another painting in the lot that
Daphne shared with us that day was quite another story,
however.Well, not another story in the
sense that it, too, was a Kalipinpa Rain Dreaming showing the great lightning
storm and the ensuing floods that swept across the country, swirling over the
sandhills and filling the rockholes. But the iconography of this painting was
most unusual, the composition extraordinarily dynamic. It shared a quality of
naturalism with the black-and-white composition, though. These were works that
required no great leap of comprehension, no tutelage in the traditional
iconography of Pintupi painting to decipher the world being
depicted.
There is no need to precisely identify any
graphic element in this composition to grasp its story. The jagged lines at the
center certainly look like lightning bolts; they also call to mind the rough and
broken channels that floods have eroded through the terrain around Kintore. The
red circles suggest rockholes, but also, perhaps, unripe bush raisins. There is
a suggestion of a creek bed in the unusual pale, sandy, dove-pink color of the
ground behind those jagged lines and circles. The rest of the design, however,
is far more ambiguous: it all reads as water in a hilly landscape, but I can't
say that one element is the rush of water, another is the representation of a
sandhill. Nonetheless, the painting succeeds brilliantly at capturing the rush
of floodwaters through the countryside. There is an exquisite balance, to my
eye, between Pintupi and Western conventions of depicting landscapes. The
painting captures the violence and the turbulence of the storm. This, I
thought, was a striking and original new direction in Pintupi
painting.As the decade of the 'Naughts
progressed, other styles came to the fore. One of the major new directions in
painting from Kintore and Kiwirkurra was the adoption of a vividly optical sense
of design, a visual trickery that recalled the Op Art paintings of Sixties
artists like Bridget Riley, filtered, of course, through a Western Desert
sensibility. The emergence of bold new styles from painters like George Ward
Tjungurrayi, a dramatic minimalism in the works of Warlimprringa Tjapaltjarri,
and the sinuous mature works of Charlie Tjapangati all partook of this visual
vibrancy. Elizabeth Marks Nakamarra joined in this experimentation, producing
works with a complexity of surface like this canvas from
2003.
Nakamarra retains a looseness of hand in
this work, a quirkiness of drawing that produces incidents to interest the eye
beyond an illusionist's tricks. The regularity of right angles in three corners
of the work gives way to a looser composition in the upper-right corner of the
work as shown here (I've rotated the canvas 90 degrees to allow for a fuller,
more detailed presentation of the design in the confined space of a browser
window). Just right of center a gentle curve intrudes into the maze; at the
upper left a pair of concentric rectangles emerge to float semi-detached above
the rest of the design.More recently,
Nakamarra has tightened up her line and begun to experiment with the effects of
color on her
geometry.
Indeed, I could say that in this 2008 work
she has begun drawing with color, fashioning depth and direction by varying
shades of yellow-orange that are set against an dull gray line that nonetheless
sings with a pearlescent quality. (This ability to manipulate the eye's
perception of this neutral gray that sits in the background of many such
paintings is a device employed frequently by several Papunya Tula artists and
one that never fails to surprise me when I discover that some brilliant sky-blue
line or a vivid white accent turns out on close inspection to be more the color
of a battleship more than anything
else.)Moreover, the illusion of
stair-step depth is this painting will not maintain itself in my eye. Nakamarra
breaks up the pattern on the right-hand side, flattening out the appearance of
depth. Once the Escheresque spell of illusion is broken, my eye starts to focus
on the larger pattern created by the darker and lighter blocks of orange
stripes; field and ground destabilize and suddenly the entire surface of the
canvas appears to be in flux, heaving, flowing, stopping, and then starting up
again.As I was pondering this
painting's ability to create such visual turbulence, I was suddenly reminded
that it, like the previous two works I've reproduced here, depicts the Rain
Dreaming at Kalipinpa. Lining the photographs of the three paintings up side by
side, I was struck by how much they resemble one
another.
 |
 |
 |
| [Untitled], 2001, 168x61 cm |
[Untitled], 2003, 153x61 cm |
[Untitled], 2008, 87x28 cm |
In each painting, with a little imagination
and if you know the story, you can see how Nakamarra brilliantly suggests the
flashing
lightning
and the cascading water of the storm. Over the years she has experimented by
increasing the level of abstraction in her representation of the Dreaming and
the countryside. She continues her experiments with color as well. From the
very first she understood the power of monochromatic design; at the same time
she has worked with color choices that vary subtly from the classic
red-yellow-black-and-white Pintupi palette to achieve bold and dramatic effects
that nonetheless remain true to the colors of her country (seen in this snippet
at right from Google Maps of a landscape of rocky gullies just north of
Kintore).I am fascinated by the way in
which Nakamarra's career has illustrated many of the points of tension between
traditional and western ways of image making. Some critics of Aboriginal
methods complain that most painters paint the same painting over and over again
and dismiss the argument that many western artists, working in series, do the
same. Nakamarra manages to have it both ways, remaining faithful to the core of
the Dreaming and to a traditional palette, working variations on both drawing
and painting, and skillfully deploying imagery drawn from both traditional and
western models (the roundel and curve, as well as the abstracted line) to expand
her visual vocabulary. It is in this mode of innovation within tradition, of
refashioning the customary while remaining true to it, that I find her closest
kinship with the late great artist to whom she was
married.
All images reproduced with the generous permission of Papunya Tula Artists.
Posted: Sun - June 21, 2009 at 11:05 AM
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Readings, reviews, and reflections by an American observer of Australian Indigenous art, culture, politics, anthropology, music, and literature.
If you don't wish to leave comments on the blog itself please feel free to contact me directly. Will Owen
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Published On: Mar 12, 2010 01:02 PM
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